Synthetic testosterone

The most commonly used AAS in medicine are testosterone and its various esters (but most commonly testosterone undecanoate , testosterone enanthate , testosterone cypionate , and testosterone propionate ), [53] nandrolone esters (most commonly nandrolone decanoate and nandrolone phenylpropionate ), stanozolol , and metandienone (methandrostenolone). [1] Others also available and used commonly but to a lesser extent include methyltestosterone , oxandrolone , mesterolone , and oxymetholone , as well as drostanolone propionate , metenolone (methylandrostenolone), and fluoxymesterone . [1] Dihydrotestosterone (DHT; androstanolone, stanolone) and its esters are also notable, although they are not widely used in medicine. [54] Boldenone undecylenate and trenbolone acetate are used in veterinary medicine . [1]

Not “hardcore” like ‘roids – We have to accept that the male body will only be able to produce a limited amount of testosterone. As boosters are not steroids, they don’t actually inject the hormone into the body. Steroids for gaining muscle mass (anabolic steroids) are illegal in most countries and should only be used under the guidance of a trained medical professional, and only to treat serious medical or health related issues. Of course, steroids can work extremely well for testosterone , at the expense of some horrible side effects. The point is, even though they are effective, you shouldn’t expect T-boosters to share the extreme effects of anabolic steroids – so if that’s what you’re going after, look elsewhere. More on testosterone boosters vs. steroids